;.: r . '! Ndrih'jOafdlmam r:: ' f"? 1 ' v'W' " Our re tbcp!nsofrirde!Ightfal peace, r - - , - , , ' V - 1 , " - 0 t' ' 's' Ufrpdypatty r?e.tolivcltkbTOthet.. . , , . - - . . - . . -. V5Ai', ' V6t. VII. ' -- Monday, Apri2 i, 1806" - r.:-;: : V'"R- - :v - .c,;A Not43- ' ,11 mi - 1 1 -- ' " - 1 1 '; - 1 1 1 1 1 1 . - .. . ... .r ... , " T j Vjti '7' - ..mm , ... 1 ,i 1 1 11 11 1 . .1 1 ... 1 ., . 1 , -,. 1 ..Mil. , ,. ... . 1 mi .')"', '- . -: - 1 ..... , , -n - 1 ,,, , , 11 11 ii ' 11 m "T TPVlv - ... I , f - . . ; - - .. ' W -5 DISPUTE yth G. BRITAIN. - .MKi GRECC'4 RESOLUTiaS M r . a s t k b s I shall not deny that Greal-Biitairi has ynsulteci us bj impressing 'ur; seamen, neither ishai I deny I n a thrt ti atibn- hasltdmmlt--ted wanton aggressions and depre dations oin ouc birimeixvfnijlht commerce ought toberolepted. That therasoiution -Under conside-j ration is ifee" bcstcoil rs&AQ ;pur- siied ;folphe:infeiSi I ' shall 'c.otenctaa'st; ' , Restraint and prphibitwiis between nations have always arUen ifromitwo circumstances,; the first tojro mote their home industry or nian ufaclures. ; 'X'he liberal price of wa ges, i joined with the. plenty and cheapneSSf rland, which induces the luborer'td quit his employer and become lanur ofarner hi in self, who rewads with tne saihf liberality which induces his laborers to leave their ' eiriployinent for' the -same reasons as the first, therefore it is impossible! for ftianufacturs to flou rish in our present situation. 'The case in most other countries is very J diftetent, where the price of labour is low, and the rent, and tlje profit consumes the wages of the4 laborer, andthe highest order f people op press the inferior, winch 1'hope ne ver to see in this county's It inay raiionalty .bcncalculdted 'that some, f the eastern Vnd middle states will eventually become manu facturing states : some ofthose-states are nearly filled with people, and many indi viduals have large capitals employed in foreign commerce, to the amount in .many instances, of two and three hundred thousand dollars each. When peace pake s " place in ;Eurepe, and things come down to thiei natural standaidv and they can no longer employ that cap. ital 10 advantage in commercial spc cuhtions ; they will withdraw ihe same from that employment V thev must make 'use of those capitals some j where, they xannot vest ther.ito ary advantage in oui- public funds, ffank stock or -other -corporatiows beyond a certain extent, they therefore by the aid of water wctks and mac hine-r-, wilT naturally" 'etnplcy 'those cap itals in .manufactures, and I trust the lime is not many years distant. That is not now the cyse, and tai have no bearing on Vhe present Ques tion, indeed it is hardlv contended that the resolution is' trougl:t for ward for that purpose, it must there fore be brought for wartf for some other purpose. The othur circumstances- vhich gives rise to prohibitions between n ation s , . avi sc f ro m t h e . vtnl c n c e o I national animosity, which genei "ally lends in war. This tircumsjatice has brought this resolution intotxi ;.tehce, the p ream Me speaks warjihe.l'au-r gUage, and the wliole taken tget her is alirelude to war with a nation who has two hundred ships of the line, four hundrwl frigates, besides Tgun brigs and other armed vessels, whose revenue it between fortyS:and hlty millions steiling, wlio can ,o to, war with usi without jany adcii tior.al expence to themselves, who will sweep the ocean of American commerce, amounting to rfeariv one hundrdmillibns of dollars. What! the n will be the situation of our car rying trade ? what then will be the situation of your commerce and your country. - Ii appears to me a matter of great deliberation how far we ought.-to a dopt the present' resclutior:hy pio h)itbi yr the i mportatioh of British man u fact tjret ; in every country it ever was, raid always mut be the in teres of the gre0. body 'of the ptople to buy whatever they want of those Who sell it " clef pst. We cannot procure thsame arltcles so-chvap elsewhere ; even should thctta-surc-r.ot inyolv f tiail wr'j Jpjrolj if--xhitions and(fe i"f!iation,,gnd nations stihtcm fvif do it. The hon" niover iot the Uft.Jtion, asksus, u how it ilto y interred, weTcennot abide bf fafd KCtudNi s sj?Menu ' it i .ohe iiiftrrcd frornArttuHaronJanpler viun of nations who have pretedeel j u Vvheu l'rkiK inthc year-1667- 'i. lad Aiscjjiminatihg duties on Holland theutch. retaliated Dy the prohi bition oF J'renth wjnes, brandies aud the like : a war followed and the peace of Nimegiln regulated "their commercial ?5iisutesV ;Aboutthat timer tlieniih prohibited th0m; portation fXace jnanuuctuid 'in Flanders tnelbvern'ment of ; that c6ttntry,j which was then underlie dominion of Spain femcjatljfe. iialia.ted and "prohibited ajl importa tion of English woc4Ien?i Soon af ter this the French and English mu tually began their heavy dutieand prohibitlojdfhal ;:evcf?4incc heenjn'icommlialllli quar rels and hostilities ; and we with our eyes open are going into the same system.! The same hbn. Gentleman has also said it will attack Great Britain in her vitals, in fjer manufac tories and warehouses, it seem a bad method of compensating injuries done to !us tO8b another worse in jury to ourselves, which I believe will be the case by adopting the present resolution ; it will have a na tural tendency to retaliation and re venge j ' ;. It is very problematical whether the carrying trade is advantageous to this nation. Our merchants in that employment transporting fo reign produce from Batavia, and the West Indies to the U. States, and staring the cargoes for some time in warehouses and reshiping the same to Holland, the Hanse towns, An twerp in French Flanders, and Other ports, and in some instances taking the avails cf those cargoes and pro- i ceedihg to China, from whence they return with teas; m other instances rocee'io-EngaDdA'buy out the ,avails l British goddsi and the mak ing circuitous voyages tirj two and thrrc yeare, with those large capitals out of our country, and before they can realise those cargoes so as to purchase our domestic produce. My worthy colKagtte from N Y. who has just sat dowh (Mr Wil liams) has observed that commerce is vs:ntial to this country and ag riculture naturally goes with it.' This propt),sitiontaken abstractedly I shail not deny, and then asks us where is the revenue to support I government. 1 will answer tnat gentleman, by asking the same question' where is the revenue to support governmetn when ona half of that reyenue is derived from G. Britain and her dependencies? ,1 would ask that gentkman where i to be the market for 25,000,000 wt. of cotton annually exported, (it is. not to fee presumed they will not reta liate in every particular) where is to be the market for your tobacco, pot ashes, flaxseed, provisions and other domestic produce, exported from this counti y to Great-Britain, the British East and West Indies and Newfoundland, to the annual amount of between 20 and 0,000,000 I tie-. lv on it if you will embarrass all the operations of government, all the o pcrations "of th comniunity, and ntust have recourse to direct taxa tion on the farmer,, who will' be una ble to pay, for thewant of a price fb his produce your merchants become bankrupt, and! you distress the agriculturalist.' -" The same honorable gentleman frora Pennsylvania ha further b- served- it will be?'Uch a shock upon G reat-Britaini s!Ve vwjIl no t be ab 1 c to endure itLetrth?geUl email ! renect on the-Afeaiinanfi .maritime power of that country. Ever since my memory, the approaching rum ot Greal-Bvitain has been trequenty ; foretold, after all ihc vain attempts, 1 they yet regulate the commerce ol -the world, t musr 'confess, 1 have j but little faith in undertaking cm mei'cial legulations w ith that nation, and I be)iev we shatlshcw a very ! peUy figure in the attempt, and be ! obliged to recede 'ith disgrace," and 1 1 cannot vofe for. tin; present resolur. 'UioU?;.; ... ' . ! ' . . ' . .."''". ' Mh. J. R an not pm --Mr. Chair ! man, I did expeCt on coming to the, mouse i tus morning, uiuiuie menus of the resolution ouder discussion; w du'ld ,4k vje brbughtv. tbrwatd soine arguments sjiftwhat.ihey bail: istudi onsly a VTf e5r-H hat the ability to coerce G., Britain is within! t,hf dompass ot this nation's powtr j that sthW pQver:Cught novv-ta bs jcrttd and that the proposed measure is m equal to the desired effect; It be hoyes them to demonstrate all this, before they ask for our support. I did not come doWU to theHeuse"; with the expectation of listening to a gross misrepresentation of my ex pressionsyesterday ; loose and de sultory asT allow themtiiiv been, much less was I preparedto .heai: such, misrepresentationi from the lips of. a gentleman, whom I have treated with invariable and guarded respect between Vhom and myself thrttiihas long' existedfia. political niendslnp-eal on my?part appa rent on his. I did not indeed ex pect tb hear particular expressions, used by .me in the ardor of debate broken and - gulled from their con necting members, and mutilated and tortured into meanings, which cold blooded malice alone could have de vised. Sir, in this way of proceeding (without intending any profanecom, parison) the Bible itself may be made to, preach atheism j to declare that there is no Gd. Ci The foot saith in: his heart there is na God.'u Taken together, it . is inspired wisdom : dismember it, it is impiety ; It has not been denied by any member on this floor, that the car rying trade that thecommerce and navigation of these states ought to be protected. The only question is quo modo Have you the ability to protect them by war, anti are tney of sufficient value to justify the ex- pence of such protection f We say no -they cannot pay for so dear a defence, rich as they may be ; but above all, they cannot repay us for thtt loss of our constitution. It is above all price. We go farther t we affirm that trade is now protec ted by he most efficient mean s within our power, by diiciiminating dutWs, hid by the votes of southern men, and yet, sir, we are threaten ed withchisio, with a dissolution of the .union, if we do not adopi par ticular systems, devised by chance begotten of ignorance or imbecility. . But whilst I acknowledge the car rying tratie to be valuable to a cer tain extent, I must, unless I aban don eVery pretension to the charac ter of a politician, act on existing circumstances, on things as thtyare, not as I believe they ought to be In casting about, the first thing (or one of the first) to-be considered is revenue. Almost our whole , re venue is derived Ifrom commerce; ; that is, from the domestic consump tion of imports from abroad. How much comes trom the carrying trade : Your statements (I am told) say ut),uou dollars. But it ctjr whole consumption were imported in foreign bottoms, the impost would exceed its present amount by 1 1 or 1200,000 dollars. I warn gentle men against a misrepresentation of this fact. Am I therefore desirous to gain this encrease at the expence of our navigation ? Far from it. It would he to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs But what is this branch of the carrying trade, for which gentlemen would sacrifice not only our whole navigation and commerce, but the agriculture and constitution of our country ? , Look atfthis trade which is to be guarded at;every risk and the men who fol low iti Do they carry your products abroad, and bring back goods for home consumption ? No, they plunge their hands into your pockets for dravvbackU-during this very session tlhey.threatcnedao plunder the trea sury cf millions,, by a bill happily arrested on its. passage, it our tan t&ide is not protected, how comes it tha,tit has grown with a rapidity before unknown in anv nation ? .That growth hai benourished by pro tectinj? duties fostered by bur neutral ' v 1 - ,'--.', ' . " . ;- " . position. . ' r "' -.- ' I am accused too with stigtrtati zing the merchants of the XJ. S. I dny the charge. Every profession :and; calling:' .hbima!is.life is disgra eed ly unworthy members. the j jaw has its-pettifoggers, the church its hypccritetymtdicme and politics too, sir, have their empirics and i Chre&& ,.tW0'Vprofe$sioi)s in the worfJ, which caii be selected for a I ;endencT ;to develope the prtr-txis- Iting rerht of Vimpejfec'tiori planted i n o t;. r flat u re , il i e y -sre the p rofes I sion$o th lawyer and rb occupation of the trader. And f here fore ? Be- cause theyopen the wide held' of temptatio The wisest, pray er that ever ' w;as or can - be ile vised for human infirmifv, is that which teaches us to deprecate such trials-1 We be seech ;.thee, lead us not Initcntaiion V. Wlm is the fact ? T W hifst Ve boastjof :ui Hon orh on this" floor, bur name - has becom e a by-Word among the hations. Eu rope , and Paris especially, (swarms with pseudo-Americans, with Ang! and GaJlo-Americans, and -American French and English, who haye amassed immehse-fortunes by tra ding in the neutral character, by set ting it up to auction nd selling it to the best bidder. Men of this des cription striplings, without connex ons or character, have been lihown to buy rih Vessels and their cargoes, in Amsterdam and Antwerp, and trade with them, under American name, to the Indis. Neutral cha racter has constituted one of thebest remittances for colonial produce, or the goods which purchase it ; and the trade in ..this commodity of neu trality has proved a most lucrative branch of traffiic. This it is'that has sunk and degraded the American name abroad, and subjected the fair trader to vexatious seizure ' and de tention. But I am asked, if we shall submit to a tame and dastardly a bandonment of our rights ? and by those, tooj who have made a cow ardly surrender of our best interests and our honor when we were well able to have maintained Lhem. I beg leave to reply to this question by asking another. Are you prepa red to assert them f to go ai lengths to enforce them ? In what consists true dignity1? In vapouring in the newspapers ? In printed handbills and resolutions ? Or in taking ground which you can and will maintain, which no change of fortune shall compel you to desert ? Aut nun quafti tenteSf aut perfize. Does the gentleman want an explanation Here is one truly American : " Stick, or through." This is true dignity : can he give a better defination ? And what constitutes false dignity-? Playing the part of a Bobadil bul lying Effland and truckling to Spain -l beg pardon, there is no Spain : bullying England snd truck ling to France y This you have done You know, it. When gen tlemen tell us of their willingness to publish our proceedings, why do they not clear the galleries and take off the injunction of secrecy ? Let their private vote correspond wit their public profession. And let mt tell the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Smilie) that I would rather have his vote than his speech at any time. Who would support v' if he had not averred it, that he htld silence and good sense in such high respect, that he preferred the calm decisions of quiet wisdom, to the effusions of empty garrulity. The gentlman from New-York has told us, that after the call 6f the Executive for firm measures he; did not expect this opposition. And ; does he tall this a farm measure : What would have been a firm mea sure ? An embargo. That'wbuld have gone to the root of the evil. But that, sir, would not have suited your Prouus politicians. There could have been no evasion of that But ve-ur slippery mercantile 'eels can slide -over or Under this pro vi sion, ana leave the whole burthen of suffering to fall cn the planter; the farmer, nd the real American. The vf hole revenue (we .are told) is derivedf from commerce. Who pah5 it ultimately but the consumer, and with as' large a profit oh the merchants' advance of the duties (often a mere advance, of credit) as , .cuvu Hny otuerait v firmness are eitlittV above or below my comprehension. And because we are anxious to see the public clebt paid off and the true interests of the nation maibf aihed--becausevwe will not abandon' the plough, ;and strug gle to restrain Executive? influence, we are charged with hostility to all commerce, with insensibility to the honor of our country, Whea our "doors wtre shbt Ythis is no breach of confidence) one of my "colleagues called .for the reading f a Message from the -;President, soon - a Ji er vhe i ame Into office. It jtvas tlie 4no$t ;-, severe and "cu tt t n "sati re that thattv ever listened to. J sayjt was ahitte ati re oh y our . proce eihgs I theiaT' aiidtf:. nojw. It recommended" the applica tioiTi of br resources to; a.' speedy: ditcliat ge. pf the ptilie debt; frigid ' adherence to sped lie- appropriation iyinjr dtwn exetnilve pffiicers tothe : : leqter ot rtne law, resrncinj&3ne.rn :;T ommentary ;?-- In time .of peace-(tor innof rr Ana. will 'flH 3 ftJ .,WtM V?? mill attack on TripQli, iir) the" cx4 1 penouure6 01 i.na.oiaTyeparimenc v ko Far from each item, ot exnence 'Hi beinp: limited by thepecific appro- nrtation for , that . object) have e. . eeeded tHe ossiuproprile4V;r V for that branch o the public sejr Ice. . j sikty p.tt( ti& 7 Andf If . this 1 aJ I spectihen -bt tfc;'-yeSrly:---cos?'6i4 'liitik i rtti n s: in t h em ud "w h htAiina t " ran you make of the xlisbursemenU in time of actual war against a tcfwl erful maritime statc---'wKeh TyDUit $ se venty jours i are , rcaay tor eaiT. . This is naked truth It .resjsjoilf figiire5---if it be not trUe how come 1' : it that we have p&ssed two approgri- ation laws, to the amount of six 5 hundred thousand dollars, . during the- present session-to cover the y de ficiencies of thev last ".;year---al- , most the only bills that Sve h?v6 passed Yes, sir I am- for paying one debt ofi (the cost pt a., tormer. war) before A I enter into another and score up 'a second. 1 corifecs my self to be "Smong the number of1, J. those politicians (gentlemen may ,v ; style them visionary, if thejr 'please)' wlo hailed the President 'Ot the v United States as the political Messiah, rent to convince an unbeV . lieving world that adebt once funded . might bepaid off, without, the in. V terventiottlcf a spunge. If in this. . 1 wasrvisiohary, at least 1 was .not- - alone. The,. promise has been largey.-? 4 the nations calls for its perfbrmahcefc.. Look at the measures of the govern.' rent, and when you reckon the Louisiana debt, that crc?ted under the British Treaty and some others, . J it will appear that you have nearly, J scored up as much Jiew debt a yottv-', have paid off the old. I speak 'of I'A principal : for paying the interest of . a, debt is not diminishing ir and my- friend fiom Pennsylvania, (Mr.vJ. 'I Clay) must have taken the interest nnto his larcre account bf veaterdavs. v j - The amount of principal redeemed ' less than 18,000,000. But you will be told, for your money you hava- 1 value received, at least. This I freely?acknowled;e t:1 would ha'ye ' given the sum for the Delta of th ' Mississippi, if it: could not hav ; been honourably acquired for less Of whom did we purchase-.-lrom r Spain whb had wrougfiiMy with-held , our right of deposit? So far from it, that we tell her she has vet to . make satisfaction for that injury 'I and insult we bring it into account against her No, sir, we purchased frum France, the rightful proprietor, agaiiist whom we then had no sub ject of complaint. I n accused by the gentlemati V fromrPennsylvania,XMr. SmilieHhis I suppose is a specimen of his can- dortl am reluctant to sa any ;mng J whi'sl he is absent I am sorry he has fled his seat) .of distgnediy passing ovrbne of the most impor- : tant considerations presented by the present suDjec-thc jmpiessmtnt of V our seamen And yet what did that gentleman tell y ou ? . Tliat he him r self (long; as he had trespassed 01$ your time) had been compelled . omit many i m portant thing s, that C ne inunped to afay. 1 his realises . r the proverb. " Onemaa ipay steal' a norse, wnust another must not Jook oycr the Hedge." I will tell pic, a nao scarce inrownwiTseii;' into me carriage that icorcxl roe. home, befdre I rccollec wndre- gtetted it. fTheigentltmah may ty,1 what he- pleases but he never hadl no man effcr shajl have caiise ta up braid rar with j flinchlrtg:;from any question tht may bcJipuHtionthia I floof IKow. sir. Ittcfclulemen lay " their hands op theirjiearta and an swer ?sincerely V i f thy: do believe tnts resolution na ne power te ll i c t. 1 P V 1 i 1 1 - n .MM ii i If ri 1 I 1 :t i . 4 vJit' ir A .1 i 'i f7 3 4 . . .. - '"--CS"- x4 tt - z